From Memex to HyperCard
We all take it for granted that clicking on an underlined word on a web page will magically transport us to a new site on the Internet almost instantly, but the concept of hyperlinking had a legacy well dating decades earlier.
In July of 1945, Bush wrote an essay for the well-respected literary magazine, The Atlantic Monthly which inspired and resonated with innovators for decades after it was first published. “As We May Think” sounded the opening salvo in a new way of looking at navigating through the large bodies of knowledge people were generating. Bush believed knowledge was coming in at such a great pace that no individual could not absorb, much less remember very much of it. He noted that although this ever-increasing degree of specialization was necessary for progress, but it made any possible connections between disciplines superficial, at best. And he believed that technology could help.
Based on his work with analog computers in the 1930s He envisioned a machine, which he named the “Memex,” which could store and instantly retrieve vast amounts of information by a knowledge worker seated at a large desk. The user of the Memex could instantly browse through an almost unlimited number of articles. The Memex user could then connect an item on one screen to another, creating a permanent “link” between their labels. This ideas of links and trails provided the fundamental inspiration for the kind of hypertext linking used to navigate sites on the Internet a half century later.